Emerging research is increasingly pointing to the role of the nuclear cell signaling factor NF-kB in maintaining health and even to organ renewal. A host of very-recent studies point to the crucial role of NF-kB inhibition for enabling apoptosis of both cancer and arthritic cells. Apparently, both cancers and serious inflammation shut down the apoptosis mechanisms that could enable seriously impacted cells to clear themselves out of existence. Inhibition of NF-kB allows the apoptosis mechanisms to work and the affected tissues to heal. For example, see
http://news.bio-medi...3921-1/ <br />The researchers here speculate that NF-kB inhibition could be useful for curing or reducing the impact of arthritis. Other researchers say the same with respect to cancers.
Even more interesting is a recent seminal study that shows that NF-kB is a master regulator of a programmed aging process. See http://genesdev.cshl...ract/21/24/3244. The study indicates that in multiple mammalian tissues (including skin fibroblasts, kidney, cortex, kidney medulla, abdominal muscle, skeletal muscle, and brain), aging involves continuing changes in expression of hundreds of genes. And, further, NF-kB signaling appears to be a major regulator of gene expression related to the aging progress. In fact, by inhibiting NF-kB cell signaling the researchers were able to cause the epidermal tissue of old mice to revert to the state of very young mouse tissue, both in observable characteristics and in genetic expression profile.
Finally and yet even more exciting to me, pouring over the research literature day and night in the last two days, I have discovered that no less than thirty of the substances in my anti-aging firewalls regimen block expression of NF-kB or limits its binding activity: resveratrol, pycnogenol, curcumin, green tea (EGCG), ashwagandha (withania somnifera), astragalus and astragaloside IV, gingo biloba extract, vitamin C, boswellia, allicin, alpha-lipoic acid, vitamin E, Vitamin D-3, vitamin B-6, folic acid, grape seed extract, avena sativa, co-enzyme Q-10, EPA/DHA, carnosine, lycopene, folic acid, melatonin, quercetin, grape seed extract, l-carnitine, stinging nettle and benfotiamine. It is as if an overall objective of the firewall supplement program was to inhibit expression of NF-kappaB. So far I have found only one substance in the firewall regimen that activates NF-kappaB. This is phosphatidylcholine. If the mouse experiments show the same results for humans (the genes are the same), the firewalls regimen might possibly be tweaked to produce age reversal in several human organs.
I have written this up in more detail in my Anti-aging Firewalls paper yesterday by writing new sections featuring a 13th theory of aging - Programmed Genetic Changes. At http://www.vincegiul...ngfirewalls.htm. There are two sections to look at, one describing the theory, the other the firewall regimen. I am continuing to delve into this area and hope to have more to report soon.